Cargando…

During hormone depletion or tamoxifen treatment of breast cancer cells the estrogen receptor apoprotein supports cell cycling through the retinoic acid receptor α1 apoprotein

INTRODUCTION: Current hormonal adjuvant therapies for breast cancer including tamoxifen treatment and estrogen depletion are overall tumoristatic and are severely limited by the frequent recurrence of the tumors. Regardless of the resistance mechanism, development and progression of the resistant tu...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Salazar, Marcela D, Ratnam, Maya, Patki, Mugdha, Kisovic, Ivana, Trumbly, Robert, Iman, Mohamed, Ratnam, Manohar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3109587/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21299862
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/bcr2827
_version_ 1782205451054612480
author Salazar, Marcela D
Ratnam, Maya
Patki, Mugdha
Kisovic, Ivana
Trumbly, Robert
Iman, Mohamed
Ratnam, Manohar
author_facet Salazar, Marcela D
Ratnam, Maya
Patki, Mugdha
Kisovic, Ivana
Trumbly, Robert
Iman, Mohamed
Ratnam, Manohar
author_sort Salazar, Marcela D
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Current hormonal adjuvant therapies for breast cancer including tamoxifen treatment and estrogen depletion are overall tumoristatic and are severely limited by the frequent recurrence of the tumors. Regardless of the resistance mechanism, development and progression of the resistant tumors requires the persistence of a basal level of cycling cells during the treatment for which the underlying causes are unclear. METHODS: In estrogen-sensitive breast cancer cells the effects of hormone depletion and treatment with estrogen, tamoxifen, all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA), fulvestrant, estrogen receptor α (ER) siRNA or retinoic acid receptor α (RARα) siRNA were studied by examining cell growth and cycling, apoptosis, various mRNA and protein expression levels, mRNA profiles and known chromatin associations of RAR. RARα subtype expression was also examined in breast cancer cell lines and tumors by competitive PCR. RESULTS: Basal proliferation persisted in estrogen-sensitive breast cancer cells grown in hormone depleted conditioned media without or with 4-hydroxytamoxifen (OH-Tam). Downregulating ER using either siRNA or fulvestrant inhibited basal proliferation by promoting cell cycle arrest, without enrichment for ErbB2/3+ overexpressing cells. The basal expression of RARα1, the only RARα isoform that was expressed in breast cancer cell lines and in most breast tumors, was supported by apo-ER but was unaffected by OH-Tam; RAR-β and -γ were not regulated by apo-ER. Depleting basal RARα1 reproduced the antiproliferative effect of depleting ER whereas its restoration in the ER depleted cells partially rescued the basal cycling. The overlapping tamoxifen-insensitive gene regulation by apo-ER and apo-RARα1 comprised activation of mainly genes promoting cell cycle and mitosis and suppression of genes involved in growth inhibition; these target genes were generally insensitive to ATRA but were enriched in RAR binding sites in associated chromatin regions. CONCLUSIONS: In hormone-sensitive breast cancer, ER can support a basal fraction of S-phase cells (i) without obvious association with ErbB2/3 expression, (ii) by mechanisms unaffected by hormone depletion or OH-Tam and (iii) through maintenance of the basal expression of apo-RARα1 to regulate a set of ATRA-insensitive genes. Since isoform 1 of RARα is genetically redundant, its targeted inactivation or downregulation should be further investigated as a potential means of enhancing hormonal adjuvant therapy.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3109587
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-31095872011-06-08 During hormone depletion or tamoxifen treatment of breast cancer cells the estrogen receptor apoprotein supports cell cycling through the retinoic acid receptor α1 apoprotein Salazar, Marcela D Ratnam, Maya Patki, Mugdha Kisovic, Ivana Trumbly, Robert Iman, Mohamed Ratnam, Manohar Breast Cancer Res Research Article INTRODUCTION: Current hormonal adjuvant therapies for breast cancer including tamoxifen treatment and estrogen depletion are overall tumoristatic and are severely limited by the frequent recurrence of the tumors. Regardless of the resistance mechanism, development and progression of the resistant tumors requires the persistence of a basal level of cycling cells during the treatment for which the underlying causes are unclear. METHODS: In estrogen-sensitive breast cancer cells the effects of hormone depletion and treatment with estrogen, tamoxifen, all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA), fulvestrant, estrogen receptor α (ER) siRNA or retinoic acid receptor α (RARα) siRNA were studied by examining cell growth and cycling, apoptosis, various mRNA and protein expression levels, mRNA profiles and known chromatin associations of RAR. RARα subtype expression was also examined in breast cancer cell lines and tumors by competitive PCR. RESULTS: Basal proliferation persisted in estrogen-sensitive breast cancer cells grown in hormone depleted conditioned media without or with 4-hydroxytamoxifen (OH-Tam). Downregulating ER using either siRNA or fulvestrant inhibited basal proliferation by promoting cell cycle arrest, without enrichment for ErbB2/3+ overexpressing cells. The basal expression of RARα1, the only RARα isoform that was expressed in breast cancer cell lines and in most breast tumors, was supported by apo-ER but was unaffected by OH-Tam; RAR-β and -γ were not regulated by apo-ER. Depleting basal RARα1 reproduced the antiproliferative effect of depleting ER whereas its restoration in the ER depleted cells partially rescued the basal cycling. The overlapping tamoxifen-insensitive gene regulation by apo-ER and apo-RARα1 comprised activation of mainly genes promoting cell cycle and mitosis and suppression of genes involved in growth inhibition; these target genes were generally insensitive to ATRA but were enriched in RAR binding sites in associated chromatin regions. CONCLUSIONS: In hormone-sensitive breast cancer, ER can support a basal fraction of S-phase cells (i) without obvious association with ErbB2/3 expression, (ii) by mechanisms unaffected by hormone depletion or OH-Tam and (iii) through maintenance of the basal expression of apo-RARα1 to regulate a set of ATRA-insensitive genes. Since isoform 1 of RARα is genetically redundant, its targeted inactivation or downregulation should be further investigated as a potential means of enhancing hormonal adjuvant therapy. BioMed Central 2011 2011-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3109587/ /pubmed/21299862 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/bcr2827 Text en Copyright ©2011 Salazar et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Salazar, Marcela D
Ratnam, Maya
Patki, Mugdha
Kisovic, Ivana
Trumbly, Robert
Iman, Mohamed
Ratnam, Manohar
During hormone depletion or tamoxifen treatment of breast cancer cells the estrogen receptor apoprotein supports cell cycling through the retinoic acid receptor α1 apoprotein
title During hormone depletion or tamoxifen treatment of breast cancer cells the estrogen receptor apoprotein supports cell cycling through the retinoic acid receptor α1 apoprotein
title_full During hormone depletion or tamoxifen treatment of breast cancer cells the estrogen receptor apoprotein supports cell cycling through the retinoic acid receptor α1 apoprotein
title_fullStr During hormone depletion or tamoxifen treatment of breast cancer cells the estrogen receptor apoprotein supports cell cycling through the retinoic acid receptor α1 apoprotein
title_full_unstemmed During hormone depletion or tamoxifen treatment of breast cancer cells the estrogen receptor apoprotein supports cell cycling through the retinoic acid receptor α1 apoprotein
title_short During hormone depletion or tamoxifen treatment of breast cancer cells the estrogen receptor apoprotein supports cell cycling through the retinoic acid receptor α1 apoprotein
title_sort during hormone depletion or tamoxifen treatment of breast cancer cells the estrogen receptor apoprotein supports cell cycling through the retinoic acid receptor α1 apoprotein
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3109587/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21299862
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/bcr2827
work_keys_str_mv AT salazarmarcelad duringhormonedepletionortamoxifentreatmentofbreastcancercellstheestrogenreceptorapoproteinsupportscellcyclingthroughtheretinoicacidreceptora1apoprotein
AT ratnammaya duringhormonedepletionortamoxifentreatmentofbreastcancercellstheestrogenreceptorapoproteinsupportscellcyclingthroughtheretinoicacidreceptora1apoprotein
AT patkimugdha duringhormonedepletionortamoxifentreatmentofbreastcancercellstheestrogenreceptorapoproteinsupportscellcyclingthroughtheretinoicacidreceptora1apoprotein
AT kisovicivana duringhormonedepletionortamoxifentreatmentofbreastcancercellstheestrogenreceptorapoproteinsupportscellcyclingthroughtheretinoicacidreceptora1apoprotein
AT trumblyrobert duringhormonedepletionortamoxifentreatmentofbreastcancercellstheestrogenreceptorapoproteinsupportscellcyclingthroughtheretinoicacidreceptora1apoprotein
AT imanmohamed duringhormonedepletionortamoxifentreatmentofbreastcancercellstheestrogenreceptorapoproteinsupportscellcyclingthroughtheretinoicacidreceptora1apoprotein
AT ratnammanohar duringhormonedepletionortamoxifentreatmentofbreastcancercellstheestrogenreceptorapoproteinsupportscellcyclingthroughtheretinoicacidreceptora1apoprotein